Biology professors Anne Calof and Arthur Lander wanted better access to their garden when they sat down with architect Walter Metez to discuss the renovation of their 1940 cottage in Laguna Beach, California.

The garden had attracted the couple to the house in the first place. Both had come from colder climates where year-round gardening wasn't possible. Among the home's defects was poor circulation as a result of bedrooms that functioned as hallways.

Metez corrected this with a light-filled gallery linking the bedrooms to the living and dining areas. Generous built-in shelving allows the hallway to double as a library.

He reinforced the connection to the garden with walls of glass and a series of sloped ceilings that push you toward the light and the view.

The space that is now the concrete patio was once in the shadow of the home's eaves, which blocked any view of the hills in the distance. Now, through the clerestory windows above the sliding glass doors, "you can see the sky and the trees soaring up into it," Lander says.